Man kills self after Texas college shooting

A gunman opened fire today inside a University of Texas campus library then fatally shot himself, and police are searching for a possible second suspect, university police said.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

AUSTIN, Texas - A gunman opened fire Tuesday inside a University of Texas campus library then fatally shot himself, and police are searching for a possible second suspect, university police said.

A man fired an automatic weapon on the sixth floor of the Perry-Castaneda Library early Tuesday, UT police spokeswoman Rhonda Weldon said.

"He subsequently shot himself. He is deceased," she said, adding that no one else was reported injured.

Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo told a news conference that police also are investigating what he described as a second crime scene outside the library where shots also were fired.

Police were patrolling nearby buildings with bomb-sniffing dogs to hunt for the possible second suspect and make sure no explosives had been left behind.

"What we're doing right is being methodical to eliminate the second suspect," Acevedo said.

No shots were fired by law enforcement, Acevedo said.

Senior Robby Reeb told ABCNews.com he was rushing through the campus late for a class when the shooting happened.

"I was walking from the business school, and a guy sprinted past me screaming, 'There's a guy with a gun.' I looked up and saw a man in a ski mask, wearing a suit, and carrying an assault rifle. And I called 911."

Police and university officials urged students to stay indoors. The university canceled classes for the day.

"A suspected shooter in PCL library is dead. Police are searching for possible second shooter. Lock doors, do not leave your building," the university said in an e-mail alert to students and staff.

Weldon said there was no report that the possible second suspect may have been armed, but that police are taking all precautions and keeping the campus locked down.

Investigators are trying to determine what led to the gunfire at the UT campus at Austin, which is one of the largest in the country with nearly 50,000 students.

Law enforcement from campus police, Austin police and the state Department of Public Safety rushed onto campus at the first reports of the shooting. Tank-like armored vehicles were positioned near the library. A DPS helicopter circled the campus overhead.

"It's chaos right now," student Micah Geisenberg told CNN.

The Perry-Castaneda Library is one of several on the campus and is one of the busiest undergraduate libraries.

"The students did their part, they cleared the streets, they cleared the grounds in a very quick manner," Acevedo said.

Tuesday's shooting is not the first at the school.

On Aug. 1, 1966, Charles Whitman went to the 28th floor observation deck at the UT clock tower in the middle of campus and began shooting at people below. He killed 16 people and wounded nearly three dozen before police killed him about 90 minutes after the siege began.